Wednesday, 27 February 2008
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
Butare trip, take two
so far we have driven round Kigali a bit, including during the spooky ghost town atmosphere of Umuganda, and a route where you go from one busy developed hill to another via a dirt road and fields and are still in the city. We have also visited the market and the Baobab hotel which is a great Sunday afternoon spot.
Monday / Tuesday saw us going to Butare, surprising the chaps at the pottery and tinnery who recognised us until we explained that these were Lons parents this time..
We also visited the memorial site at Murambi
this is the view from the hill, and nearby we could hear the sounds of drums and singing
Wiki describes
The Murambi Technical School, situated in the Murambi district in southern Rwanda, was the site of a massacre during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. When the killings started, Tutsis in the region tried to hide at the local church. However, the bishop and the mayor lured them into a trap by sending them to the technical school on a hill, claiming that French troops would protect them there. On April 16, 1994, some 65,000 Tutsis ran to the school, but immediately water and electricity was cut off. After managing to defend themselves with stones during a few days, the Tutsi were overrun on April 21. The French soldiers disappeared and the school was attacked by Interahamwe militiamen.
Some 45,000 Tutsi were murdered at the school, and almost all of those who managed to escape were killed the next day when they tried to hide in a nearby church.[1] The school building is now a genocide museum exhibiting the skeletons and mummified bodies of some of the thousands of people butchered there.
Veneer of normality
This article is taken directly from the Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/19/rwanda
an edited version appeared in our local New Times under the title Return to normality http://www.newtimes.co.rw/index.php?issue=13452&article=4440
As George Bush visits Rwanda, Chris McGreal reflects on a country still locked in a struggle to come to terms with its past beneath the gloss of economic success
Kigali is booming. Shopping centres, glistening new glass office towers and luxury hotels are - quite literally in some cases - paving over the country's immediate past of mass murder.
Among the grandest of the new buildings is the sprawling Serena hotel, a testament to the birth of a new Rwanda. As are its clientele. The hotel is a favourite of foreign businessmen riding an aid-driven economic boom and American tourists hoping for a glimpse of the region's famed gorillas. The visitors spend their evenings in the hotel bar with its faux Africa trappings to hear stories of Dian Fossey. What no one tells them is what happened right beneath their feet.
Where the Serena now stands was once the Hotel des Diplomates. It was a scrawny affair even before the 1994 civil war and genocide, with threadbare 1970s furniture, a dark and uninviting bar in the basement and dire food. It was also, for a few murderous weeks, the seat of government.
When Tutsi rebels took a large part of Kigali, the Hutu extremist regime overseeing the genocide retreated into the Hotel des Diplomates. Its meeting rooms became ministries. Governors and mayors were summoned from across the nation to meetings with the prime minister, Jean Kambanda, and his cabinet colleagues where they were variously congratulated on the scale of the slaughter in their home provinces or upbraided for not having sent enough Tutsis to their graves.
The memos that flew out of these meetings carried all the code words - 'work' was a euphemism for killing - but they are clear enough in their intent.
Eventually the rebels were close enough to force the administration out of Kigali altogether. It trekked west until finally re-establishing itself in Gisenyi on the border with what was then Zaire. There the administration set up in what is now another luxury hotel, though by this time it governed almost no territory and commanded no authority.
But before leaving the Hotel des Diplomates, the retreating regime saw to it that a group of its opponents was butchered on the top floor of the building. The bodies were later buried in the hotel grounds.
Weeks later the stench of the blood of those murdered there ran throughout the hotel. It was open again for business to anyone who would pay despite the smell and even though there wasn't a room in the place with a lock on the door after the fighting and looting as the capital fell to the rebels.
Eventually the Hotel Des Diplomates was bulldozed and South African money built the palace that now stands in its place. There's nothing there to mark the terrible and very recent history. But it's impossible to escape, if you know.
That is the reality across Rwanda today. To the casual eye the country has made a remarkable recovery from a tragic past. The genocide is not forgotten but it is compartmentalised into selected sites where some of the worst atrocities took place and in a memorial in the heart of Kigali where 250,000 of the victims from the city are interred in 14 graves.
There is some form of monument to the "jenoside", as it is called in Kinyarwanda, in every village. But the real memorials are in the heads of the survivors, the witnesses and even the killers as they pass churches and schools transformed into extermination centres or street corners where the Hutu militia cut down those with the wrong ethnicity written on their identity cards.
Walk out of the Serena, turn left and after a few hundred yards you come to the military barracks where ten Belgian peacekeepers were tortured and butchered by the Rwandan army on the first day of the genocide. Turn right at the barracks, follow the road round and after a few minutes you reach Kigali hospital, where the army dragged Tutsis from their beds and bayoneted them. Some time after the genocide, a mass grave with 2,000 bodies was discovered in the hospital grounds.
Move on down the road - past the French embassy where diplomats were more concerned about saving the ambassador's dog than human beings - and you reach a large roundabout. Half way around is the St Famille church where a notorious priest, Wenceslas Munyeshyaka, stood at the entrance with a cross around his neck, a gun on his hip and a list in his hand, ticking off the names of those he had chosen to hand over to the waiting militiamen and their machetes.
It is possible to travel through most of the west and south of Rwanda and encounter such reminders of mass murder every few miles or even every few yards, though few of them are formally marked.
Some Rwandans choose to go on as if nothing happened. Pious congregations assemble each Sunday in churches like the one in Kibuye where the 11,500 people who had sought sanctuary there were killed in a single day in April 1994, including the parish priest, a Hutu who turned down the opportunity to save his own life.
But for others the appearance of normality is an added torture.
A year after the genocide, Esther Mugawayo, a Tutsi mother of two small children whose husband and parents were murdered, told me that she had experienced many tortured moments since the killings. She watched her young daughter trying to summon her daddy from the night sky, and she was haunted by images of dogs eating her mother. Most of Esther's family were murdered, including her older sister, who was stoned to death, and a cousin who was thrown into a latrine pit. As she tried to climb out, a man chopped off her arms. Thirty-one of Esther's relatives lie in a single mass grave in her village, Mwirute.
For her, one of the hardest things to handle was the way it seemed as if almost everyone went on as if nothing had happened.
"Everything looks so normal," she said. "All of those lights and all of those cars. All those trees and all those flowers. Sometimes I want to stop people in the street and ask: 'Don't you know?'"
More than a decade on, other survivors walking the streets of Kigali have that same repressed fury at what passes for normality. One is Olive Rutayisire, now 45, widowed and with two adopted children in their teens to care for in place of her four-year-old daughter, who was murdered with her father.
Like many survivors she lives with a mix of anger, grief and fear that her world might implode again. She is also not alone in saying she is "condemned to live".
Olive said she has a hard time walking the streets of Kigali because the ghosts of the past are everywhere, but it seems to her that others are blind to them. Hutus would rather forget what was done in their name, and a younger generation of Tutsis - now politically dominant - seem more interested in the pursuit of fine clothes and mobile phones than remembering the past.
"There are two kinds of Tutsis now. The survivors and the others - those who came back from exile after the genocide or who were too young to know. I think they don't really want to know. They want to go to the memorials and say we are all Rwandans now so this mustn't happen again, and then they go home and forget until the next time. I want to shake them and say: 'Can't you see? It's all around us, the genocide is everywhere.' How can people just go on as normal?" she asked.
Next to the mass graves at the main Kigali memorial is a museum that seeks to explain, or at least lay out the facts. It is no fault of the museum that the terrible pictures of mutilated bodies and the heart-rending accounts of survivors telling of the fate of relatives cannot convey the full horror of the 100 days of murder. Even the most moving part of the museum, a hall lined with family snaps of the dead - a wedding picture from the seventies, nervous children on their first day at school with post-genocide captions added: "Yvan Musabe, Murdered age 16 years. C'est inimaginable" - leaves you more numb and disbelieving than anything.
But the museum does at least cast the genocide in the wider history of inhumanity with an exhibition on the suffering of others, from the Armenians and Cambodians to the people of the Balkans and the Jews murdered by the Nazis. It is a context notably lacking in Jerusalem's own memorial to the Holocaust, which sees that mass murder as a "unique event" with no comparison and no broader lessons for humanity other than the need to resist the scourge of anti-Semitism.
Rwanda's post-genocide government believes the wider context is important in purging the ideology of extermination from the country by drumming home the message that not only the Tutsis suffered. All Rwandans have paid the price in some way or other and it must never happen again.
That is not, however, a universal view. Last month, the education ministry said it had purged schools of about 50 teachers for continuing to spread the "ideology of genocide" in their schools by making Hutu and Tutsi children wear different uniforms and repeating the old canards that dehumanise Tutsis.
The ministry said that Mataba secondary school, in the north of the country, was teaching from a book that included the following turn of phrase: "Tutsis are snakes, we're sick of them and we will kill them". Gaseke secondary school, about 30km from Kigali, was still circulating the Hutu Ten Commandments published by extremists in the run up to the genocide. They include: "Hutu must stop taking pity on the Tutsi" and "Hutu must stand firm and vigilant against their common enemy: the Tutsi".
It is an important struggle to win for the day when no one is left alive who can see the ghosts of genocide as they wander Kigali's streets.
introducing the staff
Here we have Theoniste and Deo who are the night guards - they work as a team together, and can spend hours chatting even thought they work together 5 nights a week for 13 hours at a time from 18.00 - 07.00 (they each get 1 night off)
Clarisse is our femme de menage or domestique - she works from 08.00 - 16.30 and cleans for us, haggles with veg man, irons etc etc, I'm teaching her some cooking too
Evariste is the gardener, he has 8 children, and wears flip flops even for dangerous work.
We have a regular day gaurd Emmanuel who is currently on leave. Will take photos later
Friday, 15 February 2008
More update
A completely different subject. Bush is coming to Rwanda. He probably needs to be seen in Africa, before the elections. So he spends a few days in Africa (ao Ghana, Benin, Tanzania and Rwanda). He will probably make some very smart remarks like "These people need not be so poor". In any case, he comes here Tuesday and so some CIA people already arrived to check the situation etc. Some roads will probably be closed, but everything is secret. Hopefully they will close the road so I can't come to work. But it is more likely they will close the road while I'm at work. Anyway, no news really, as we don't know anything.
Lon Pitt
I am a star.
A few weeks ago my colleague got a call if he new any blond Europeans. Someone is making a film and they need a Swedish UN soldier. Of course his first reaction was: "Lon is the best", I mean, that should be his first reaction. He did ask why they didn't try the Swedish embassy first, apparently a strange suggestion. Anyway, one thing let to another, I did two auditions and tried on the uniform. The uniform trousers are far to small, but you don't notice that because of the jacket and the big boots. During the audition the director told me, my accent was too British, so I blame Hazel.
Tomorrow I will be on the set for the shooting. My fee is nominal, but I expect a big return in the sales of merchandise; who doesn't want a Lon action doll?
this Lons costume fitting
If you ask nicely, Haze might put a photo on the blog. You can order photo's via our blog, signed ones are extra.
O yeah, the film is called "Les zones turquoises" and I will be playing the role of the gate keeper. A small role, but of course essential for the film. It is about a reporting during the genocide. He seeks protection from the UN. In the mean time the UN watch powerless while horrible things go on just outside their gates. I expect it might be a bit like "shooting dogs" or "hotel Rwanda". Anyone who hasn't seen either of this films, should at least watch one.
Lon as a soldier - sorry is blurred
film set
Thursday, 14 February 2008
Footware
most kids and lots of adults wear a locally produced plastic shoe which comes in a variety of bright colours - these are pretty cheap to buy at around a dollar
men on the other hand - especially the smarter kind of men favour a chisel toed style which often seems to be a size or two too big
women tend to wear either a comfy open shoe, or ridiculous heels which must be hell to walk up and down hills in. Will keep trying to photo the evidence.
No wonder I get funny looks wandering round in my crocs
Update 3 - Butare
We visited the pottery at Gatagara which is still run by the Twa people, who make up just 1 % of Rwandas population, and traditionally are potters
and the tinnery near Butare where objects are cast in tin and hand soldered and polished
mould in sand
rejects waiting to be melted down again
soldering
polishing
I forgot to take a photo of the shop area - but will add after next visit
Sunday, 10 February 2008
Update 2
local beehives
we did get a bit lost - I wonder how?
mm..coffee
Lake Kivu
Update 1
had great fun at the market
Live turkey - of course
we've also gone for walks and drives around Kigali and had the chance to meet some budding Beckhams
can you spot Lon?
and have sampled many Rwandan delights (and not so delightful dinners) - by far the favourite all-rounders are brochettes garni - fish, beef, or goat kebabs served with salad and chips.
Some photos courtesy of Mum & Bill